PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Republic of Liberia
Geography
Area: 111,369 sq. km. (43,000 sq. mi.). Slightly
larger than Ohio.
Cities: Capital--Monrovia
(pop. 1,010,970). Principal
towns--Ganta (pop. 41,000), Buchanan (pop.
34,000), Gbarnga (pop. 34,000), Kakata (pop.
33,000), Voinjama (pop. 26,000).
Terrain: Three
areas--Mangrove swamps and beaches along the
coast, wooded hills and semideciduous shrub
lands along the immediate interior, and dense
tropical forests and plateaus in the interior.
Liberia has 40% of West Africa's rain forest.
People
Nationality: Noun
and adjective--Liberian(s).
Population (2008): 3.49 million.
Annual growth rate (2008): 2.1%.
Ethnic groups: Kpelle 20%, Bassa 16%, Gio 8%,
Kru 7%, 49% spread over 12 other ethnic groups.
Religions: Christian 40%, Muslim 20%, animist
40%.
Languages: English is the official language.
There are 16 indigenous languages.
Education: Literacy (2003)--20%.
Health: Life
expectancy (2005)--42.5
years.
Work force: Agriculture--70%; industry--15%; services--2%.
Employment in the formal sector is estimated at
15%.
Government
Type: Republic.
Independence: From American Colonization Society
July 26, 1847.
Constitution: January 6, 1986.
Political parties: 30 registered political
parties.
Economy
GDP (IMF 2007 est.): $473.9 million.
Real GDP growth rate (2008, projected): 9.6%.
Per capita GDP (2006): $185.50.
Average annual inflation (2008, projected):
9.0%.
Natural resources: Iron ore, rubber, timber,
diamonds, gold, and tin. The Government of
Liberia believes there may be sizable deposits
of crude oil along its Atlantic Coast.
Agriculture: Products--coffee,
cocoa, sugarcane, rice, cassava, palm oil,
bananas, plantains, citrus, pineapple, sweet
potatoes, corn, and vegetables.
Industry: Types--agriculture,
iron ore, rubber, forestry, diamonds, gold,
beverages, construction.
Trade (2007, provisional): Exports--$184.1
million (of which rubber $170.9 million). Major
markets--Germany, Poland, U.S., Greece. Imports--$498.7
million (petroleum $125 million; rice $65.3
million).
PEOPLE
There are 16 ethnic groups that make up
Liberia's indigenous population. The Kpelle in
central and western Liberia is the largest
ethnic group. Americo-Liberians who are
descendants of freed slaves that arrived in
Liberia early in 1821 make up an estimated 5% of
the population.
There also are sizable numbers of Lebanese,
Indians, and other West African nationals who
comprise part of Liberia's business community.
The Liberian constitution restricts citizenship
to only people of Negro descent, and land
ownership is restricted to citizens.
Liberia was traditionally noted for its academic
institutions, iron-mining, and rubber. Political
upheavals beginning in the 1980s and a 14-year
civil war (1989-2003) largely destroyed
Liberia's economy and brought a steep decline in
living standards.
HISTORY
Portuguese explorers established contacts
with Liberia as early as 1461 and named the area
Grain Coast because of the abundance of "grains
of paradise" (Malegueta pepper seeds). In 1663
the British installed trading posts on the Grain
Coast, but the Dutch destroyed these posts a
year later. There were no further reports of
European settlements along the Grain Coast until
the arrival of freed slaves in the early 1800s.
Liberia, "land of the free," was founded by free
African-Americans and freed slaves from the
United States in 1820. An initial group of 86
immigrants, who came to be called Americo-Liberians,
established a settlement in Christopolis (now
Monrovia, named after U.S. President James
Monroe) on February 6, 1820.
Thousands of freed American slaves and free
African-Americans arrived during the following
years, leading to the formation of more
settlements and culminating in a declaration of
independence of the Republic of Liberia on July
26, 1847. The drive to resettle freed slaves in
Africa was promoted by the American Colonization
Society (ACS), an organization of white
clergymen, abolitionists, and slave owners
founded in 1816 by Robert Finley, a Presbyterian
minister. Between 1821 and 1867 the ACS
resettled some 10,000 African-Americans and
several thousand Africans from interdicted slave
ships; it governed the Commonwealth of Liberia
until independence in 1847.
In Liberia's early years, the Americo-Liberian
settlers periodically encountered stiff and
sometimes violent opposition from indigenous
Africans, who were excluded from citizenship in
the new Republic until 1904. At the same time,
British and French colonial expansionists
encroached upon Liberia, taking over much of its
territory. Politically, the country was a
one-party state ruled by the True Whig Party
(TWP). Joseph Jenkins Roberts, who was born and
raised in America, was Liberia's first
President. The style of government and
constitution was fashioned on that of the United
States, and the Americo-Liberian elite
monopolized political power and restricted the
voting rights of the indigenous population. The
True Whig Party dominated all sectors of Liberia
from independence in 1847 until April 12, 1980,
when indigenous Liberian Master Sergeant Samuel
K. Doe (from the Krahn ethnic group) seized
power in a coup d'etat. Doe's forces executed
President William R. Tolbert and several
officials of his government, mostly of Americo-Liberian
descent. One hundred and thirty-three years of
Americo-Liberian political domination ended with
the formation of the People's Redemption Council
(PRC).
Over time, the Doe government began promoting
members of Doe's Krahn ethnic group, who soon
dominated political and military life in
Liberia. This raised ethnic tension and caused
frequent hostilities between the politically and
militarily dominant Krahns and other ethnic
groups in the country.
After the October 1985 elections, characterized
by widespread fraud, Doe solidified his control.
The period after the elections saw increased
human rights abuses, corruption, and ethnic
tensions. The standard of living further
deteriorated. On November 12, 1985, former Army
Commanding Gen. Thomas Quiwonkpa almost
succeeded in toppling Doe's government. The
Armed Forces of Liberia repelled Quiwonkpa's
attack and executed him in Monrovia. Doe's Krahn-dominated
forces carried out reprisals against Mano and
Gio civilians suspected of supporting Quiwonkpa.
Despite Doe's poor human rights record and
questionable democratic credentials, he retained
close relations with Washington. A staunch U.S.
ally, Doe met twice with President Ronald Reagan
and enjoyed considerable U.S. financial support.
On December 24, 1989, a small band of rebels led
by Doe's former procurement chief, Charles
Taylor, invaded Liberia from Cote d'Ivoire.
Taylor and his National Patriotic Front rebels
rapidly gained the support of many Liberians and
reached the outskirts of Monrovia within six
months.
From 1989 to 1996 one of Africa's bloodiest
civil wars ensued, claiming the lives of more
than 200,000 Liberians and displacing a million
others into refugee camps in neighboring
countries. The Economic Community of West
African States (ECOWAS) intervened in 1990 and
succeeded in preventing Charles Taylor from
capturing Monrovia. Prince Johnson--formerly a
member of Taylor's National Patriotic Front of
Liberia (NPFL)--formed the break-away
Independent National Patriotic Front of Liberia
(INPFL). Johnson's forces captured and killed
Doe on September 9, 1990. Taking refuge in
Sierra Leone and other neighboring countries,
former AFL soldiers founded the new insurgent
United Liberation Movement of Liberia for
Democracy (ULIMO), fighting back Taylor's NPFL.
An Interim Government of National Unity (IGNU)
was formed in Gambia under the auspices of
ECOWAS in October 1990, headed by Dr. Amos C.
Sawyer. Taylor (along with other Liberian
factions) refused to work with the interim
government and continued fighting. After more
than a dozen peace accords and declining
military power, Taylor finally agreed to the
formation of a five-man transitional government.
A hasty disarmament and demobilization of
warring factions was followed by special
elections on July 19, 1997. Charles Taylor and
his National Patriotic Party emerged victorious.
Taylor won the election by a large majority,
primarily because Liberians feared a return to
war had Taylor lost.
For the next six years, the Taylor government
did not improve the lives of Liberians.
Unemployment and illiteracy stood above 75%, and
little investment was made in the country's
infrastructure. Liberia is still recovering from
the ravages of war; pipe-borne water and
electricity are generally unavailable to most of
the population, especially outside Monrovia, and
schools, hospitals, roads, and infrastructure
remain derelict. Rather than work to improve the
lives of Liberians, Taylor supported the
Revolutionary United Front in Sierra Leone (see Sierra
Leone Country Background Note). Taylor's
misrule led to the resumption of armed rebellion
from among Taylor's former adversaries. By 2003,
armed groups called "Liberians United for
Reconciliation and Democracy" (LURD) and
"Movement for Democracy in Liberia" (MODEL),
largely representing elements of the former
ULIMO-K and ULIMO-J factions that fought Taylor
during Liberia's previous civil war (1989-1996),
were challenging Taylor and his increasingly
fragmented supporters on the outskirts of
Monrovia.
On June 4, 2003 in Accra, Ghana, ECOWAS
facilitated peace talks among the Government of
Liberia, civil society, and the LURD and MODEL
rebel groups. On the same day, the Chief
Prosecutor of the Special Court for Sierra Leone
issued a press statement announcing the opening
of a sealed March 7, 2003 indictment of Liberian
President Charles Taylor for "bearing the
greatest responsibility" for atrocities in
Sierra Leone since November 1996. In July 2003
the Government of Liberia, LURD, and MODEL
signed a cease-fire that all sides failed to
respect; bitter fighting reached downtown
Monrovia in July and August 2003, creating a
massive humanitarian disaster.
On August 11, 2003, under intense U.S. and
international pressure, President Taylor
resigned office and departed into exile in
Nigeria. This move paved the way for the
deployment by ECOWAS of what became a
3,600-strong peacekeeping mission in Liberia (ECOMIL).
On August 18, leaders from the Liberian
Government, the rebels, political parties, and
civil society signed a comprehensive peace
agreement that laid the framework for
constructing a 2-year National Transitional
Government of Liberia (NTGL), headed by
businessman Gyude Bryant. The UN took over
security in Liberia in October 2003, subsuming
ECOMIL into the United Nations Mission in
Liberia (UNMIL), a force that grew to its
present size of over 12,000 troops and 1,148
police officers.
The October 11, 2005 presidential and
legislative elections and the subsequent
November 8, 2005 presidential run-off were the
most free, fair, and peaceful elections in
Liberia's history. Ellen Johnson Sirleaf
defeated international soccer star George Weah
59.4% to 40.6% to become Africa's first
democratically elected female president. She was
inaugurated in January 2006 and formed a
government of technocrats drawn from among
Liberia's ethnic groups and including members of
the Liberian diaspora who had returned to the
country to rebuild government institutions. The
president's party, the Unity Party, does not
control the legislature, in which 12 of the 30
registered political parties are represented.
The political situation has remained stable
since the 2005 elections. The Government of
Liberia has made positive strides aimed at
political stability and economic recovery.
President Sirleaf has taken a public stance
against corruption and has dismissed several
government officials. The President is supported
by highly experienced and technically competent
senior officials, and the public has more
confidence in her administration than in any of
its recent predecessors. President Sirleaf
enjoys good relations with international
organizations and donor governments, with whom
she is working closely on Liberia's development.
The national legislature has enacted several key
reforms.
In order to maintain stability through the
post-conflict period, Liberia's security sector
reform efforts have led to the disarmament of
more than 100,000 ex-combatants, the wholesale
U.S.-led reconstruction of the Armed Forces of
Liberia, and a UN-led effort to overhaul the
Liberian National Police. The mandate of UNMIL
has been extended to September 2008 and a
gradual drawdown will commence in 2008, to last
several years. During this period the Government
of Liberia and its development partners will
focus on creating jobs, attracting investment,
and providing education and other essential
services to Liberia's communities. The
Government of Liberia won substantial donor
support for its new Poverty Reduction Strategy
at the June 2008 Liberia Poverty Reduction Forum
in Berlin, Germany.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
Liberia has a bicameral legislature
consisting of 64 representatives and 30
senators. The 2005 election placed a spectrum of
political personalities in the legislature, most
for six-year terms. Senior senators were elected
for nine-year terms. Party structures remain
weak, and politics continues to be
personality-driven. Historically, the executive
branch heavily influenced the legislature and
judicial system.
The judiciary is divided into four levels,
including justices of the peace, courts of
record (magistrate courts), courts of first
instance (circuit and specialty courts), and the
Supreme Court. Traditional courts and lay courts
exist in rural areas of the country. Trial by
ordeal, though officially outlawed, is practiced
in various parts of Liberia. The formal judicial
system remains hampered by severe shortages of
qualified judges and other judicial officials.
Locally, political power emanates from
traditional chiefs (town, clan, or paramount
chiefs), mayors, and district commissioners.
Mayors are elected in principal cities in
Liberia. Superintendents appointed by the
president govern the counties. There are 15
counties in Liberia.
Principal Government Officials
President--Ellen Johnson Sirleaf
Vice President--Joseph Nyumah Boakai
Speaker of the House of Representatives--J. Alex
Tyler
Chief Justice of the Supreme Court--Johnnie N.
Lewis
Minister of Foreign Affairs--Olubanke
King-Akerele
Minister of Finance--Augustine Ngafuan
Minister of Justice--Philip A. Z. Banks
Minister of Defense--Brownie Samukai
Minister of Post and Telecommunication--Jeremiah
Sulunteh
Minister of Internal Affairs--Ambulai Johnson
Minister of Education--Joseph Korto
Minister of Public Works--Luseni Donzo
Minister of Agriculture--Christopher Toe
Minister of Health and Social Welfare--Walter
Gwenigale
Minister of Commerce and Industry--Miata
Beysolow (acting)
Minister of Information, Culture and
Tourism--Lawrence Bropleh
Minister of Planning and Economic Affairs--Amara
Konneh
Minister of State and Chief of Staff--Edward
McClain
Minister of Land, Mines and Energy--Eugene
Shannon
Minister of Labor--Samuel Kofi Woods
Minister of Youth and Sports--Etmoniah Tarpeh
Minister of Gender and Development--Varbah
Gayflor
Minister of Transportation--Jackson E. Doe
Chairman, National Investment
Commission--Richard Tolbert
Director, Bureau of the Budget--vacant
Director General, General Service
Agency--Willard Russell
Executive Governor, Central Bank of Liberia--J.
Mills Jones
Commissioner, Bureau of Immigration and
Naturalization--Christian Massaquoi
Director General, Liberia National
Police--Beatrice Munah Sieh
Director, National Security Agency--Fombah
Sirleaf
Director General, National Fire Service--Joseph
A.B. Derrick
Chairman, Governance Commission--Amos C. Sawyer
Chairman, National Elections Commission--James
Fromoyan
Chairman, Truth and Reconciliation
Commission--Jerome Verdier
Chairwoman, Anti-Corruption Commission--Frances
Johnson Morris (acting)
Liberia maintains an embassy in
the United States at 5201 16th Street, NW,
Washington DC, 202-723-0437.
ECONOMY
The Liberian economy relied heavily on the
mining of iron ore and on the export of natural
rubber prior to the civil war. Liberia was a
major exporter of iron ore on the world market.
In the 1970s and 1980s, iron mining accounted
for more than half of Liberia's export earnings.
Following the coup d'etat of 1980, the country's
economic growth rate slowed down because of a
decline in the demand for iron ore on the world
market and political upheavals in Liberia.
The 1989-2003 civil war had a devastating effect
on the country's economy. Most major businesses
were destroyed or heavily damaged, and most
foreign investors and businesses left the
country. Iron ore production stopped completely,
and the United Nations banned timber and diamond
exports from Liberia. UN sanctions on Liberian
timber were removed in 2006; activity in the
timber sector is expected to resume on a large
scale during the October 2008-May 2009 dry
season. Diamond sanctions were terminated by the
UN Security Council in April 2007, and Liberian
diamond exports have resumed through the Kimberley
Process Certification Scheme. Gold deposits,
some of which are currently nearing production,
should soon begin to contribute to government
revenues and provide additional employment.
Currently, Liberia's revenues come primarily
from rubber exports and revenues from its
maritime registry program. Liberia has the
second-largest maritime registry in the world;
there are 2,724 vessels totaling 83.3 million
gross tons registered under its flag, earning
some $16 million in maritime revenue in Liberian
FY 2007/2008 (July 1-June 30). There is
increasing interest in the possibility of
commercially exploitable offshore crude oil
deposits along Liberia's Atlantic Coast.
With a democratically elected government in
place since January 2006, Liberia seeks to
reconstruct its shattered economy. The
Governance and Economic Management Assistance
Program (GEMAP), which started under the
2003-2006 transitional government, is designed
to help the Liberian Government raise and spend
revenues in an efficient, transparent way. In
addition, the Liberian Government is working to
improve the business climate, has formed a
commission to deal with land tenure issues, and
is reviewing tax and tariff regimes to harmonize
them with neighbors in the Economic Community of
West African States (ECOWAS). The Liberian
National Investment Commission reported $97
million in new investment in 2007 and has set a
target of $100 million a year for future years.
Investors are finding opportunities in mining,
rubber, agro-forestry, light industry, and other
sectors. Arcelor Mittal Steel has negotiated an
agreement to invest over $1.5 billion in the
mining sector, and the Liberian Government is
engaged in negotiations with several other large
foreign investors.
Years of conflict and mismanagement also left
Liberia with a large debt burden of $3.4
billion, owed to multilateral development banks,
bilateral creditors, and commercial creditors.
On June 12, 2008, the United States became the
first bilateral creditor to sign a bilateral
agreement implementing the Paris Club's April
2008 debt treatment for Liberia. Several other
bilateral creditors have pledged debt relief,
and the International Monetary Fund (IMF), World
Bank, and African Development Bank have approved
a formal program to clear Liberia's $1.5 billion
in arrears to international financial
institutions. With this support, and with
technical assistance provided by Liberia's
international partners, the Liberian Government
seeks to make key economic reforms to attract
investment and qualify for eventual debt relief
under the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC)
initiative.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
Liberia has maintained traditionally cordial
relations with the West. Liberia currently also
maintains diplomatic relations with Libya, Cuba,
and China.
Liberia is a founding member of the United
Nations and its specialized agencies and is a
member of the African Union (AU), the Economic
Community of West African States (ECOWAS), the
African Development Bank (ADB), the Mano River
Union (MRU), and the Non-Aligned Movement.
During the administration of Charles Taylor,
relations between Liberia and its West African
neighbors became seriously strained. West
African countries backed by the African Union
and the United Nations negotiated a peace
agreement in Accra, Ghana that subsequently led
to the exile of Charles Taylor to Nigeria in
August 2003. With the election of Ellen Johnson
Sirleaf, Liberia has seen significant
improvements in relations with its West African
neighbors and the wider world. Relations between
Liberia and its immediate neighbors in the Mano
River region are back on track, and efforts are
underway to strengthen relations with other
countries. Liberia currently holds the
chairmanship of the reinvigorated Mano River
Union. Liberia signed a non-aggression pact with
Sierra Leone when newly elected President Ernest
Bai Koroma visited in September 2007. Liberia is
a major proponent of regional integration.
Liberia has taken steps to forge closer ties
with Western countries, especially the United
States. President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf has
visited several Western countries, including the
United Kingdom, Sweden, Norway, Spain, France,
and Germany. President Sirleaf has also visited
China and Libya, with whom Liberia maintains
close ties.
U.S.-LIBERIA RELATIONS
Congress appropriated $100,000 in 1819 for
the establishment of Liberia (and resettlement
of freemen and freed slaves from North America)
by the American Colonization Society, led by
prominent Americans such as Francis Scott Key,
George Washington's nephew Bushrod, Henry Clay,
Daniel Webster, and Presidents Monroe, Adams,
and Jackson. The first group of settlers arrived
in Liberia from the United States in the 1820s.
The United States, which officially recognized
Liberia in 1862, shared particularly close
relations with Liberia during the Cold War.
The outbreak of civil war in Liberia and the
long dominance of Charles Taylor soured
bilateral relations. However, Liberia now counts
the United States as its strongest supporter in
its democratization and reconstruction efforts.
Since the end of Liberia's civil war in 2003,
the United States has contributed over $750
million in bilateral assistance and more than
$750 million in assessed contributions to the UN
Mission in Liberia (UNMIL). In the current
fiscal year, the U.S. will commit another $162
million bilaterally and $179 million through
UNMIL. In February 2008, President Bush visited
Liberia, where he held his fourth one-on-one
meeting with President Sirleaf since Sirleaf's
inauguration in January 2006. Peace Corps
volunteers will return to Liberia in 2008 for
the first time since 1990.
The U.S. Agency for International Development
(USAID) implements the U.S. Government's
development assistance program in Liberia, the
second-largest USAID development program in
Africa. USAID's post-conflict rebuilding
strategy focuses on reintegration and is
increasingly moving towards a longer-term
development focus. Rehabilitation efforts
include national and community infrastructure
projects, such as expanding access to
electricity, building roads, refurbishing
government buildings, training Liberians in
vocational skills, promoting business
development, and improving livelihoods while
protecting Liberia's forests. USAID also funds
basic education programs, improving education
for children, focusing on girls, and training
teachers. In the health area, USAID programs
include primary health care clinics, HIV/AIDS
prevention, and a large malaria program. USAID
supports rule of law programs, establishing
legal aid clinics and victim abuse centers,
training judges and lawyers, community peace
building and reconciliation efforts, and
anti-corruption projects to promote transparency
and accountability in public sector entities.
USAID is also providing support to strengthen
the legislature and other political processes.
USAID is strengthening civil society's role in
delivering services and advocating good
governance. Total USAID funding in FY 2008 is
$105 million.
Principal U.S. Officials
Ambassador--Linda
Thomas-Greenfield
Chargé d'Affaires--Brooks A. Robinson
Acting USAID Director--Rick Scott
Management Counselor--vacant
Political/Economic Counselor--Steven Koutsis
Economic Officer--Lucy Abbott
Public Affairs Officer--Meg Riggs
Consular Officer--Alma Gurski
Regional Security Officer--Adrian Diaz (acting)
Defense Attaché--LTC Jeffrey Stansfield
Office of Security Cooperation--LTC William
Wyatt
Peace Corps--Lucianne Phillips
The U.S.
Embassy is
located on 111 United Nations Drive, Mamba
Point, Monrovia, tel: 011-231-77-054825; fax:
231-77-010370.